Nutrient characteristics of the water masses and their seasonal variability in the eastern equatorial Indian Ocean

Mar Environ Res. 2010 Sep-Oct;70(3-4):272-82. doi: 10.1016/j.marenvres.2010.05.009. Epub 2010 May 27.

Abstract

Nutrient characteristics of four water masses in the light of their thermohaline properties are examined in the eastern Equatorial Indian Ocean during winter, spring and summer monsoon. The presence of low salinity water mass with "Surface enrichments" of inorganic nutrients was observed relative to 20 m in the mixed layer. Lowest oxygen levels of 19 microM at 3 degrees N in the euphotic zone indicate mixing of low oxygen high salinity Arabian Sea waters with the equatorial Indian Ocean. The seasonal variability of nutrients was regulated by seasonally varying physical processes like thermocline elevation, meridional and zonal transport, the equatorial undercurrent and biological processes of uptake and remineralization. Circulation of Arabian Sea high salinity waters with nitrate deficit could also be seen from low N/P ratio with a minimum of 8.9 in spring and a maximum of 13.6 in winter. This large deviation from Redfield N/P ratio indicates the presence of denitrified high salinity waters with a seasonal nitrate deficit ranging from -4.85 to 1.52 in the Eastern Equatorial Indian Ocean.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Ecosystem
  • Environmental Monitoring*
  • Indian Ocean
  • Nitrates / analysis
  • Nitrites / analysis
  • Oxygen / analysis
  • Phosphates / analysis
  • Salinity
  • Seasons*
  • Seawater / chemistry*
  • Silicates / analysis

Substances

  • Nitrates
  • Nitrites
  • Phosphates
  • Silicates
  • Oxygen